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Applied AI·June 30, 2026·1 min read

Anthropic Releases Claude Science for Automating Research

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Claude Science is a direct move to turn LLMs into a co-pilot for scientific grunt work—data wrangling, literature, and pipeline glue. R&D orgs should be piloting this class of tool now, with a clear line between automation of tedium and human control over hypotheses and conclusions.

Applied AI

Claude Sonnet 5 costs $2 per 1M input tokens and $10 per 1M output tokens through August 31, after which prices rise to $3 and $15, respectively

Anthropic is using a time-boxed discount window on Sonnet 5 to pull real agent workloads onto its stack before Labor Day—your cost models for pilots vs. production need to reflect the post-August 31 pricing, not the teaser rate. If you’re locking in contracts or budgeting for high-output agents, model against $3 / $15 now and treat the current pricing as a temporary subsidy.

Applied AI

Qualcomm targets Nvidia, AMD, Huawei with Dragonfly AI accelerator rack loaded with 43TB of LPDDR5x, future generations set to smash 7PB/s bandwidth

Qualcomm is betting that LPDDR5x plus its proprietary HBC can win inference on cost and power, not just raw FLOPs—43 TB per rack and future 7 PB/s bandwidth is a direct play at memory-bound workloads. If you’re building large-scale inference services, start tracking HBM-free architectures as a hedge against both cost and supply volatility in HBM-heavy stacks.

Applied AI

Anthropic launches Claude Sonnet 5, saying it nears Opus 4.8 performance at lower prices and is substantially better than Sonnet 4.6 for agentic work

Near-Opus 4.8 performance at Sonnet pricing, tuned for planning and tool use, compresses the premium you pay for top-tier models in agent workflows. If you’ve been reserving your heaviest agents for only the most valuable tasks, this is the moment to re-benchmark and see which can drop to a cheaper-but-capable tier without losing reliability.